Rosa Gómez's eco-friendly materials company has grown 340% in three years, proving there's serious market demand for green solutions in Spain's capital.
As traditional corporate tenants shrink their footprint, a new wave of flexible workspace operators and tech-forward companies are capitalizing on Madrid's transformed commercial property landscape.
A former software engineer's decision to launch a digital services firm in Madrid's creative quarter has created over 150 jobs in three years, bucking Spain's chronic youth unemployment trend.
From retail on Gran Vía to tech startups in Chamberí, Madrid's entrepreneurs are navigating unprecedented uncertainty as geopolitical tensions and currency volatility reshape their operating costs and growth prospects.
As venture capital retreats and regulatory pressures mount, the innovation hubs along Paseo de la Castellana confront their most challenging year since the pandemic.
New funding patterns and consumer spending metrics reveal a hospitality sector bouncing back stronger than expected, with implications for the broader Madrid economy.
As multinational firms abandon traditional downtown towers for flexible hubs across the city, Madrid's job market is undergoing a fundamental geographic and cultural shift.
As rental prices in central neighbourhoods surge beyond reach for middle-income families, a new wave of investment in micro-apartments and co-living spaces is reshaping the capital's residential landscape.
Isabel Rodríguez's logistics firm transforms how Spanish companies do business across West Africa, proving Madrid's entrepreneurial spirit extends far beyond Europe.
Despite Spain's economic recovery, the capital's employers grapple with labour shortages, brain drain, and inflationary pressures that threaten growth.
Rising commercial rents, foreign capital flows, and shifting consumer patterns in the capital's food and retail sector offer a clearer picture of Spain's economic health.
Energy prices, labour shortages, and cautious consumer spending are putting unprecedented pressure on independent retailers and service providers across the capital.
As visitor numbers rebound to record levels, emerging hospitality players and neighbourhood developers are capitalizing on shifting travel patterns that favour authenticity over mass tourism.
As visitor patterns evolve and operating costs surge, Madrid's hotel and restaurant sectors face a critical inflection point that demands immediate operational adjustments.
As hybrid arrangements become the norm rather than exception, Madrid's job market is fragmenting into winners and losers—forcing employers to rethink salaries, office spaces, and recruitment strategies.